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1.
A persistent problem with attempts to examine bitter taste mechanismshas been the lack of adequate behavioral methodology providingdata which parallels that obtained from physiological investigations.We developed a brief contact procedure to assess the abilityof rats to detect the presence of a weak bitter compound dissolvedin a strong sucrose solution. Male Fischer 344 rats were trainedto drink immediately to multiple 10-s presentations of acetaminophen(2, 8, 32, 128 mM), chlorpheniramine maleate (1, 3, 9, 27 mM)L-tryptophan (13.5, 27, 54, 108 mM), pseudoephedrine hydrochloride(1, 4, 16, 64 mM) and quinine hydrochloride (0.008, 0.04, 0.2,1.0 mM) dissolved in 0.8 M sucrose. The number of licks to sucroseand water were also measured. A microcomputer controlled stimuluspresentations and measured the animal's licks of each solutionduring each 10-s presentation. The responses to the bitter +sucrose mixture were significantly decreased at most concentrationswith increasing levels of the bitter component. This was truefor all five bitter-tasting compounds, but over different concentrationranges relatively unique to each compound. The present studyis the first to characterize the sensory effects of acetaminophen,pseudoephedrine, and chlorpheniramine maleate, all purportedto taste bitter to humans. These results demonstrate rats' acuteability to discriminate by taste not only the presence but theconcentration of a dilute bitter compound dissolved in a strongsucrose solution. Chem. Senses 20: 305–312, 1995.  相似文献   

2.
There is good evidence indicating that ion-transport pathways in the apical regions of lingual epithelial cells, including taste bud cells, may play a role in salt taste reception. In this article, we present evidence that, in the case of the dog, there also exists a sugar-activated ion-transport pathway that is linked to sugar taste transduction. Evidence was drawn from two parallel lines of experiments: (a) ion-transport studies on the isolated canine lingual epithelium, and (b) recordings from the canine chorda tympani. The results in vitro showed that both mono- and disaccharides in the mucosal bath stimulate a dose-dependent increase in the short-circuit current over the concentration range coincident with mammalian sugar taste responses. Transepithelial current evoked by glucose, fructose, or sucrose in either 30 mM NaCl or in Krebs-Henseleit buffer (K-H) was partially blocked by amiloride. Among current carriers activated by saccharides, the current response was greater with Na than with K. Ion flux measurements in K-H during stimulation with 3-O-methylglucose showed that the sugar-evoked current was due to an increase in the Na influx. Ouabain or amiloride reduced the sugar-evoked Na influx without effect on sugar transport as measured with tritiated 3-O-methylglucose. Amiloride inhibited the canine chorda tympani response to 0.5 M NaCl by 70-80% and the response to 0.5 M KCl by approximately 40%. This agreed with the percent inhibition by amiloride of the short-circuit current supported in vitro by NaCl and KCl. Amiloride also partially inhibited the chorda tympani responses to sucrose and to fructose. The results indicate that in the dog: (a) the ion transporter subserving Na taste also subserves part of the response to K, and (b) a sugar-activated, Na-preferring ion-transport system is one mechanism mediating sugar taste transduction. Results in the literature indicate a similar sweet taste mechanism for humans.  相似文献   

3.
The amiloride-sensitive salt transduction pathway is thought to be critical for the discrimination between sodium and nonsodium salts in rodents. In rats, lingual application of amiloride appears to render NaCl qualitatively indistinguishable from KCl. In this study, we tested four strains of mice for salt discriminability. In one strain (C57BL/6J), chorda tympani nerve (CT) responses to NaCl are attenuated by amiloride, and in the other three strains (BALB/cByJ, 129P3/J, DBA/2J) they are not. Under water-restriction conditions, these mice (7 mice/strain) were trained in a gustometer to lick for water from one reinforcement spout in response to a five-lick presentation of NaCl and to lick from another in response to KCl [salt concentration was varied (0.1-1 M) to render intensity irrelevant]. Mice were then tested with the stimuli dissolved in amiloride hydrochloride, and the latter was used as the reinforcer as well. Each concentration of amiloride (0.1-100 microM) was used on 2 separate days with control sessions interposed. Mice from all four strains were able to discriminate NaCl from KCl reliably. Amiloride impaired this discrimination in a dose-dependent fashion. Moreover, performance on NaCl trials appeared to be more affected by amiloride than that on KCl trials in all four strains. Thus, in contrast to the predictions based on CT recordings, discrimination in all four strains appeared to depend on the amiloride-sensitive transduction pathway, which, in the case of BALB/cByJ, 129P3/J, and DBA/2J (and perhaps C57BL/6 as well), may exist in taste buds innervated by nerves other than the CT.  相似文献   

4.
Chlorhexidine, a bitter bis-biguanide antiseptic, is the only known blocker of the human salty taste. In order to characterize the effects of chlorhexidine on stimulus identification, taste confusion matrix (TCM) performance was measured for subjects treated with 1.34 mM chlorhexidine gluconate (n = 9) and water controls (n = 9). Ten stimuli [water, 0.1 M NaCl, 0.1 M KCl, 0.1 mM quinine-HCl (QHCl), 0.1 M monosodium glutamate (MSG), 3 mM citric acid, 0.3 M sucrose and mixtures of NaCl, QHCl and citric acid with sucrose] were presented in 10 replicates for identification from a list of 10 stimulus names. T(10), a measure of performance consistency from information theory, was lower for chlorhexidine-treated subjects (2.02 +/- 0.11 bits) than controls (2.73 +/- 0.11 bits) (P < 0.0001). T(2), an indirect measure of pairwise stimulus discrimination, approached chance levels (0.40 bit) in chlorhexidine-treated subjects for all possible pairs of NaCl, KCl, QHCl and water, as well as pairs composed of sucrose and the NaCl-sucrose and quinine-sucrose mixtures. In controls T(2) values approached perfect scores (1.00 bit) for all stimulus pairs except NaCl-KCl and NaCl-MSG. The results demonstrate a decreased ability to identify taste stimuli that is consistent with alterations in the ability of stimuli to elicit salty and bitter taste perceptions. As a selective, effective, persistent and reversible blocker of taste perceptions, chlorhexidine should prove useful in defining taste mechanisms in humans.  相似文献   

5.
In frogs, the glossopharyngeal nerve (GL) innervates taste receptors on almost the entire tongue. The mandibular branch (MBF) and palatine branch (PN) of the facial nerve innervate taste receptors on a very small area at the base of the tongue and on the palate, respectively. In the present study, effects of amiloride, an epithelial sodium channel blocker, on the tonic responses of the GL, MBF and PN in frogs to NaCl, LiCl, KCl and CaCl(2) were investigated. In three nerves, amiloride at 0.5 mM, a relatively high concentration, did not affect the responses to 0.15 (concentration just above threshold)-0.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M LiCl and 0.3 M KCl, whereas it almost completely inhibited the response to 1.0 mM CaCl(2). Amiloride may exert an inhibitory action on the response to CaCl(2) by a competitive antagonism between Ca(2+) and a monovalent cation of amiloride, because the response to Ca(2+) is competitively inhibited by other cations such as Na(+) and Mg(2+). The lack of inhibitory effect of amiloride on the responses in the GL, MBF and PN to NaCl suggests that amiloride-sensitive sodium channels in the apical membrane of taste receptor cells are not involved in sodium taste transduction in frogs.  相似文献   

6.
Amiloride is known to inhibit the taste response of vertebrates to salt by blocking the amiloride-sensitive sodium channel. In this study, we investigated electrophysiologically the effect of amiloride on the taste response of the fleshfly Boettcherisca peregrina. When 0.5 mM amiloride was included in taste solutions, the response of the salt receptor cell (salt response) to sodium chloride (NaCl) was not depressed but those of the sugar receptor cell (sugar responses) to sucrose, glucose, fructose, l-valine (l-Val) and l-phenylalanine (l-Phe) were strongly depressed. An inhibitory effect of amiloride on the concentration-response relationship for both sucrose and l-Phe was clearly revealed, but not at high concentrations of sucrose. After pretreatment of a chemosensory seta with 0.15 mM amiloride for 10 min, the salt response to NaCl was not affected. On the other hand, the sugar responses to sucrose, fructose, l-Val and l-Phe were depressed just after amiloride pretreatment. The sugar response to adenosine 5’-diphosphate (ADP) mixed with 0.5 mM amiloride was not depressed, but the response to ADP alone was depressed after amiloride pretreatment. It was therefore observed that amiloride depressed the responses to all stimulants that react with each of the receptor sites of the sugar receptor cell.  相似文献   

7.
The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) blocker amiloride has been shown to increase the behaviorally measured NaCl detection threshold in mice. In this study, a conditioned taste aversion (CTA) paradigm was used to examine whether 100 microM amiloride has a perceptible taste that could contribute to this observed decrease in behavioral responsiveness. Eighty-four C57BL/6J (B6) and 64 DBA/2J (D2) mice were divided into eight groups (n=8-12 per group), in which half received an injection of 0.15 M LiCl (2 mEq/kg) and the other half an equivalent saline injection, in three conditioning trials. The four conditioned stimuli were 100 microM amiloride hydrochloride, water, 0.1 and 0.3 M NaCl. Neither strain demonstrated acquisition of a CTA to amiloride in a brief-access (BA) taste test (5 s trials in the gustometer). Although 0.3 M NaCl is inherently aversive, its pairing with LiCl led to significantly further decreases in licking during the BA test on salt trials in both strains. The D2 strain clearly avoided 0.1 M NaCl, whereas avoidance of this stimulus was more equivocal in B6 mice. The inefficacy of amiloride to serve as a conditioned stimulus in taste aversion learning involving three LiCl pairings suggests that the effects of this ENaC blocker on taste-related behavioral responses to NaCl are likely due to its pharmacological interference with sodium taste transduction.  相似文献   

8.
Whole nerve, as well as single fiber, responses in the chorda tympani proper (CT) and glossopharyngeal (NG) nerves of 1- to 7-week-old pigs were recorded during taste stimulation. In the CT acids and in the NG bitter compounds gave the largest responses. Both nerves exhibited large responses to monosodium glutamate (MSG), MSG with guanosine 5'-monophosphate (GMP) and MSG with inositine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) as well as to glycine, xylitol, sucrose, fructose and glucose. Alitame, aspartame, betaine, neohesperedin dihydrochalcone (NHDHC), super-aspartame, saccharin and thaumatin elicited no or little response. Hierarchical cluster analysis of 49 CT fibers separated four major clusters. The M cluster, comprising 28.5% of all fibers, is characterized by strong responses to MSG, KCl, LiCl and NaCl. The responses to NaCl and LiCl were unaffected by amiloride. The H cluster (24.5%) includes units responding principally to acids. The Q cluster (18.5%) responds to quinine hydrochloride (QHCl), sucrose octaacetate (SOA) and salts with amiloride. The S cluster (28.5%) exhibits strong responses to xylitol, glycine and the carbohydrates as well as to MSG alone and to MSG with GMP or IMP. In 31 NG fibers, hierarchical cluster analysis revealed four clusters: the M cluster (10%), responding to MSG and MSG with GMP or IMP; the H cluster (13%), responding to acids; the Q cluster (29%), responding strongly to QHCl, SOA and tilmicosinR; and the S cluster (48%), responding best to xylitol, carbohydrates and glycine but also to the umami compounds. Multidimensional scaling analysis across fiber responses to all stimuli showed the best separation between compounds with different taste qualities when information from both nerves was utilized.  相似文献   

9.
Desor  J.A.; Finn  John 《Chemical senses》1989,14(6):793-803
Amiloride reduces several responses of the taste system to NaCl.These effects are crucial support for the ion transport theoryof salt taste. Here, three experiments tested for the inhibitoryeffect of amiloride on salt taste in normal, whole-mouth tastingin humans. There was no evidence that amiloride reduces thesaltiness of NaCl when used as a pretreatment, mixed into solutionwith NaCl, or both. In a fourth experiment, pretreating thetongue with amiloride-soaked filter paper and presenting NaClon filter paper within the treated area also had no effect onsaltiness. In addition, amiloride, a bitter compound, did notsuppress the taste of sucrose, and caffeine did not enhancethe taste of NaCl. These results suggest the ion transport theoryof NaCl taste needs to be modified or extended to account fornormal whole-mouth tasting of NaCl in humans. 1 Present address: 1605 Harbor Court Tower, 10 East Lee St.,Baltimore, MD 21202, USA  相似文献   

10.
Component signaling in taste mixtures containing both beneficial and dangerous chemicals depends on peripheral processing. Unidirectional mixture suppression of chorda tympani (CT) nerve responses to sucrose by quinine and acid is documented for golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). To investigate mixtures of NaCl and acids, we recorded multifiber responses to 50 mM NaCl, 1 and 3 mM citric acid and acetic acid, 250 μM citric acid, 20 mM acetic acid, and all binary combinations of each acid with NaCl (with and without 30 μM amiloride added). By blocking epithelial Na(+) channels, amiloride treatment separated amiloride-sensitive NaCl-specific responses from amiloride-insensitive electrolyte-generalist responses, which encompass all of the CT response to the acids as well as responses to NaCl. Like CT sucrose responses, the amiloride-sensitive NaCl responses were suppressed by as much as 50% by citric acid (P = 0.001). The amiloride-insensitive electrolyte-generalist responses to NaCl + acid mixtures approximated the sum of NaCl and acid component responses. Thus, although NaCl-specific responses to NaCl were weakened in NaCl-acid mixtures, electrolyte-generalist responses to acid and NaCl, which tastes KCl-like, were transmitted undiminished in intensity to the central nervous system. The 2 distinct CT pathways are consistent with known rodent behavioral discriminations.  相似文献   

11.
Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is believed to elicit a unique taste perception known as umami. We have used conditioned taste aversion assays in rats to compare taste responses elicited by the glutamate receptor agonists MSG, L-aspartic acid (L-Asp), and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), and to determine if these compounds share a common taste quality. This information could shed new light upon the receptor mechanisms of glutamate taste transduction. Taste aversions to either MSG, L-Asp or NMDA were produced by injecting rats with LiCl after they had ingested one of these stimuli. Subsequently, rats were tested to determine whether they would ingest any of the above compounds. The results clearly show that a conditioned aversion to MSG generalized to L-Asp in a dose-dependent manner. Conversely, rats conditioned to avoid L-Asp also avoided MSG. Conditioned aversions to MSG or L-Asp generalized to sucrose when amiloride was included in all solutions. Importantly, aversions to MSG or L-Asp did not generalize to NMDA, NaCl or KCl, and aversions to NMDA did not generalize to MSG, L-Asp, sucrose or KCl. These data indicate that rats perceive MSG and L-Asp as similar tastes, whereas NMDA, NaCl and KCl elicit other tastes. The results do not support a dominant role for the NMDA subtype of glutamate receptors in taste transduction for MSG (i.e. umami) in rats.  相似文献   

12.
Activity of the glossopharyngeal nerve was recorded with bipolarsilver wire electrodes while taste stimuli were applied to thelingual surface in anesthetized mudpuppies. Taste stimuli wereinjected into a continuous stream of distilled water which wasrunning over the tongue, KCl, CaCl2 and LiCl2 at 0.4 M elicitedbrisk responses, as did HCl at 0.2 M and quinine at 6 x 10–4M. Sucrose, glucose and saccharin did not elicit responses.Twenty amino acids were surveyed for their ability to evokea response at 0.04 M: 1-arginine, 1-valine, 1-phenylalanine,1-tryptophan, 1-tyrosine, 1-glutamic acid, 1-lysine and histidinealways evoked responses, whereas other amino acids either didnot evoke responses or only occasionally evoked responses. Thesupernatants from solutions of minced worms and minnows andPurina Trout Chow were effective taste stimuli. Pre-adaptingthe tongue to Ringer's solution by running a continuous streamof Ringer's solution over it eliminated responses to quinineand decreased responses to NaCl. Pre-adapting the tongue to10–4 to 10–3 M amiloride, a potent sodium channelblocker, did not alter the responses to NaCl, LiCl, or othertaste stimuli.  相似文献   

13.
Taste responses of the gerbil IXth nerve   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Summated taste responses to 12 taste solutions were recordedfrom the IXth (glossopharyngeal) nerve of 38 Mongolian gerbils(Meriones unguiculatus). 0.3 M NH4Cl was the most effectivestimulant. The relative magnitude of the peak summated responsewas a positively accelerated function of log molar concentration.Absolute thresholds were determined for three chemicals: 0.002M NaCl, 0.0003 M HCl, and 0.002 M sucrose. The relative magnitudesof the responses to quinine, NH4Cl, and KCl were greater forthe IXth nerve than for the chorda tympani nerve, whereas NaClwas more effective for the chorda tympani. A similar patternis seen in the rat. Acetic and citric acid may bind to commonreceptor sites. NH4Cl, KCl, and HCl may also have receptor sitesin common.  相似文献   

14.
Current evidence suggests salt taste transduction involves at least two mechanisms, one that is amiloride sensitive and appears to use apically located epithelial sodium channels relatively selective for Na(+) and a second that is amiloride insensitive and uses a variant of the transient receptor potential vanilloid receptor 1 (TRPV1) that serves as a nonspecific cation channel. To provide a functional context for these findings, we trained Trpv1 knockout (KO) and wild-type (WT) C57BL/6J mice (n = 9 or 10/group) in a two-response operant discrimination procedure and measured detection thresholds to NaCl and KCl with and without amiloride. The KO and WT mice had similar detection thresholds for NaCl and KCl. Amiloride shifted the NaCl sensitivity curve to the same degree in both groups and had virtually no effect on KCl thresholds. In addition, a more detailed analysis of chorda tympani nerve (CT) responses to NaCl, with and without benzamil (Bz, an amiloride analog) treatment revealed that the tonic portion of the CT response of KO mice to NaCl + Bz was absent, but both KO and WT mice displayed some degree of a phasic response to NaCl with and without Bz. Because these transients constitute the entire CT response to NaCl + Bz in Trpv1 KO mice, it is possible that these signals are sufficient to maintain normal NaCl detectabilty in the behavioral task used here. Additionally, there may be other amiloride-insensitive salt transduction mechanisms in taste receptor fields other than the anterior tongue that maintain normal salt detection performance in the KO mice.  相似文献   

15.
Nejad  Mohssen S. 《Chemical senses》1986,11(3):283-293
A comparison of the integrated responses of the rat's greatersuperficial petrosal (GSP) and chorda tympani (CT) nerves toa number of taste stimuli was studied. The GSP nerve of therat was very responsive to the chemical stimulation of the oralcavity. Among the selected stimuli related to the four basictaste qualities, 0.5 M sucrose produced the greatest neuralresponse in the GSP nerve, whereas, 0.1 M NaCl produced thegreatest in the CT nerve. The GSP nerve integrated responseto 0.5 M sucrose solution was approximately three times as greatin magnitude as that to a 0.1 M NaCl solution. The neural responsemagnitude of the GSP and CT nerves were as follows: GSP nerve;0.5 M sucrose >0.02 M Na-saccharin >0.05 M citric acid>0.1 M NaCl > 0.01 M quinine-HCl. CT nerve; 0.1 M NaCl> 0.05 M citric acid > 0.02 M Na-saccharin > 0.01 Mquinine-HCl >0.5 M sucrose. The response magnitudes of theGSP nerve to 0.3 M chloride salt solutions were: LiCl > CaCl2> NaCl > NH4Cl > KCl, whereas the response magnitudesof the CT nerve to the above salts were: LiCl > NaCl >NH4Cl > CaCl2 > KCl. All 0.5 M solutions of the selectedsugars (sucrose, rhamnose, galactose, lactose, fructose, -methyl-D-glucoside,xylose, mannose, arabinose, maltose, sorbose and glucose) evokedneural responses in both GSP and CT nerves. The order of theresponse magnitudes of the GSP nerve to the selected sugarswas similar to that of the CT nerve but the absolute magnitudesof the GSP nerve were greater.  相似文献   

16.
Harada S  Maeda S 《Chemical senses》2004,29(3):209-215
To clarify developmental changes in the gustatory system of the rat, integrated taste responses from the chorda tympani (CT) nerve were recorded and analyzed at different postnatal ages. The response magnitude was calculated relative to the response to the standard, 0.1 M NH4Cl. Even at 1 week of age, the CT responded well to all tested 0.1 M chloride salts (NH4Cl, NaCl, LiCl, KCl, RbCl and CsCl). The responses to 0.1 M NaCl and LiCl increased with increasing age of the rat while response magnitudes to KCl, RbCl and CsCl did not change up to 8 weeks. At 1 week, the integrated response pattern was quite similar to that in adult rats for NaCl, HCl and quinine hydrochloride (QHCl). The concentration-response functions for NaCl, HCl, QHCl and sucrose at 2 weeks were essentially the same as those at 8 weeks. These results suggest that taste buds in the 2-week-old rat are functionally mature for the detection of the four basic taste stimuli. The relative magnitude of the responses to the various sugars was smaller at 1 week compared to the adult rat and reached a maximum at weeks 3-4, then decreased gradually with age. Among the six sugars, sucrose was the most effective followed by lactose. From weeks 1-4, the magnitude of the integrated taste response to fructose was smaller than that to lactose except at 3 weeks of age. Maltose, galactose and glucose were less potent stimuli than the other sugars tested. The response magnitude to lactose at 4 weeks had decreased compared to that for the other sugars. Taste responses to the sugars in preweanling and adult rats were not cross-adapted by the individual sugars. These results suggest that after 1 week of age during postnatal development in the rat, taste information from the CT rapidly increases in its importance for feeding behavior.  相似文献   

17.
Conditioned taste aversion studies have demonstrated that rats conditioned to avoid monosodium glutamate (MSG) with amiloride added to reduce the intensity of the sodium component of MSG taste, will generalize an aversion for MSG to sucrose and vice versa. This suggests that taste transduction for sodium, sucrose and MSG may intersect at some point. Generalization of conditioned taste aversion indicates that two substances share similar taste features, but it does not reveal the extent of their differences. In this study, we tested how well rats can discriminate sucrose and MSG under a variety of conditions. Water-deprived rats were trained on a combination of water reinforcement and shock avoidance to discriminate between MSG and sucrose, both with and without amiloride, and with and without equimolar NaCl in all solutions. In the absence of amiloride, rats reliably distinguished between MSG and sucrose down to 10 mM solutions. However, they could correctly identify solutions only above 50 mM in the presence of amiloride, equimolar sodium chloride, or both. These results suggest that gustatory stimulation by MSG and sucrose interact somewhere in taste transduction, perhaps within taste receptor cells or gustatory afferent pathways.  相似文献   

18.
The integrated responses to gustatory stimuli applied to thesoft palate were recorded from the greater superficial petrosalnerve (GSP) and were compared with those from the chorda tympaninerve (CT) innervating the anterior part of the tongue in therat. Stimuli included various concentrations of NaCl, sucrose,HCl and quinine hydrochloride, and 0.5 M of six sugars. Theinhibitory effects of amiloride on the responses to sodium salts,including various concentration of NaCl, 0.1 M sodium acetateand 0.01 M sodium saccharin, were also tested. Both the phasicand tonic responses to sugars in the GSP were significantlylarger than those in the CT, whereas both responses to NaClin the GSP were significantly smaller than those in the CT.Although amiloride at 50 µM significantly depressed thephasic and tonic responses to NaCl with a wide range of concentrationin the CT, little inhibitory effect was observed in the GSP.The tonic response to sodium acetate, when dissolved in amiloridesolution, was depressed to 15% of the control in the CT, andslightly but significantly depressed to 70% in the GSP. Theseresponse characteristics of the GSP may play important rolesin the processing of gustatory information. Chem. Senses 22:133–140, 1997.  相似文献   

19.
Sodium-salt transduction in many species may be mediated byboth apical and submucosal ion channels on the taste receptorcell membrane. The apical ion channel is blockable by the diureticamiloride, whereas the submucosal pathway is not. Sodium saltswith small anions, such as NaCl, can stimulate submucosal aswell as apical ion channels; sodium salts with large anions,such as Na-gluconate, activate primarily the apical channels.In humans, reports on the effects of amiloride on the tasteof NaCl are conflicting and no data exist on the effects ofamiloride on organic sodium salts. In the present experiment,subjects gave magnitude estimates of the total intensity andof each of the basic taste qualtities for NaCl, Na-gluconateand KCl. Five concentrations of each of these stimuli were presentedto the anterior tongue following distilled water adaptationand after amiloride treatment. There was a significant decreasein the total taste intensity of NaCl and Na-gluconate afteramiloride, but no effect on KCl. The saltiness of all threesalts was unaffected, but amiloride decreased the preceivedsourness of the sodium salts. KCl sourness was unaffected byamiloride. There was a proportionately larger effect of amilorideon Na-gluconate than on Nacl, which is consistent with a largerrole for the apical ion channel in Na-gluconate transduction.However, an appreciable amiloride-insensitive component is presentfor both NaCl and Na-gluconate, suggesting that an amiloride-insensitivepathway also plays a role in the transduction of both sodiumsalts. These data support the hypothesis that an amiloride-sensitivetransduction component exists in humans, but suggest that itis considerably smaller than in many other species.  相似文献   

20.
Mouse taste preference tests: why only two bottles?   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Two-bottle tests have been used extensively to measure the preference for taste and nutrient solutions but there has been little work with tests involving more than two bottles. Here, we compare the results obtained in two-bottle tests with those obtained in three- and six-bottle tests. In Experiment 1, we measured the preferences for 2 mM saccharin, 50 mM citric acid, 0.3 mM quinine hydrochloride and 75 mM NaCl displayed by 129X1/SvJ (129) and C57BL/6J (B6) mice. Mice drank more taste solution when they received two bottles providing taste solution and one providing water than when they received either a standard two-bottle test or two bottles providing water and one providing taste solution. The three-bottle tests also revealed the left spout side preferences of the 129 strain and were generally better at distinguishing between the 129 and B6 strains (i.e. were more sensitive) than were the two-bottle tests. In Experiment 2, we measured intakes and preferences in tests with six bottles, with one, two, three, four or five containing 75 mM NaCl and the rest containing water. NaCl preferences were monotonically related to the number of NaCl spouts available. A follow-up experiment found similar results whether the index of ingestion was volume intakes or licks. This argues that spillage cannot account for the effect of spout number on taste solution intake. Together, the results suggest that (i) the number of bottles of taste solution and water has a profound influence on taste solution intake and preference, and (ii) three-bottle tests may be more sensitive than two-bottle tests in many circumstances.  相似文献   

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